EU: Competitiveness Council

Lord Drayson: My honourable friend the Minister of State for Energy and Sustainable Development (Malcolm Wicks) has made the following Written Ministerial Statement.
	The following Statement provides information on the Competitiveness Council in Luxembourg on 25 June, at which I represented the UK. Annette Schavan, the German Federal Education and Research Minister, chaired the council.
	The council held an exchange of views and reached agreement on a general approach on the European Institute of Technology (EIT). The council agreed that the number of knowledge and innovation communities (KICs) should be set at two or three to allow for flexibility and that the possibility of establishing KICs inter alia in renewable energy and climate change should be included in the preamble to the draft regulation establishing the EIT. On the budget, the council agreed a sum of €308.7 million for a six-year period beginning on 1 January 2008. The UK expressed its concerns over that figure.
	Council conclusions were adopted on a charter for the management of intellectual property rights and on the CREST report on co-ordination of the structural funds and the framework programme to support research and development.
	Ministers then had a short exchange of views on the European research area (ERA) Green Paper following up on discussions at the Würzburg ministerial informal and the May Competitiveness Council, focusing on strengthening research institutions, knowledge sharing and international co-operation. The council agreed that more effective knowledge transfer between universities, business and public research institutions was at the heart of improving Europe's capacity for innovation, and some argued that any Commission proposals following the Green Paper would need to be informed by effective evaluation of the sixth framework programme for research.
	Under AOB, the Commission gave four presentations on the recently or soon to be adopted legislation to set up the clean sky and European Nanoelectronics Initiative Advisory Council (ENIAC), joint technology initiatives (JTIs) and the ambient assisted living and Eurostars Article 169 initiatives, stressing the need to get rapid agreement on the JTIs to maintain industry interest.
	The presidency gave a presentation on the Euromed education and research Ministers conference and an update on the proposal for a directive on the marketing of certain measuring devices containing mercury.
	Also under AOB, the Portuguese delegation set out their plans for their upcoming presidency.

Health: Chronically Sick and Disabled Persons Act

Baroness Royall of Blaisdon: My honourable friend the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department of Health, has made the following Written Ministerial Statement.
	The annual report for 2006-07 has been laid before Parliament today, and copies have been placed in the Library. The report covers research and development work carried out by or on behalf of any government department in relation to equipment that might increase the range of activities and independence or well-being of disabled people.
	The current report places such research in the context of the national service framework for long-term conditions and the White Paper on adult social care and outlines the role of assistive technology in making independent living easier for older people and people with disabilities. The report describes the wide range of government-funded projects supporting the development, introduction and evaluation of assistive technology.

Northern Ireland: Youth Justice Agency

Lord Rooker: The Minister of State for Northern Ireland (Paul Goggins) has made the following Ministerial Statement.
	I have placed copies of the Youth Justice Agency's annual report and accounts for 2006-07 in the Libraries of both Houses.
	This is the agency's fourth annual report since its inception on 1 April 2003. It achieved nine of its 10 key performance targets and 19 of its 23 development objectives.